You know, I don't think I've ever actually heard "White Christmas."
Sure, I know that it was written by Irving Berlin, a Jewish immigrant, and that it's become a vital part of American culture. I'd definitely heard part of it before, the end part, where everyone sings "may all your Christmases be white"...but does the song really go like that? Is it really sort of pretty and actually funny? Does this make me a bad Jew? (Add this to the fact that I admitted on our Jewish parenting site that I actually like Halloween, I'm about to be kicked out of the so-Orthodox-I-don't-own-a-TV camp for reals.)
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We just got a press copy of lounge Pink Martini's new CD "Joy to the World." They're a Portland-based band (they call themselves a "little orchestra") who performs smart, swinging lounge music that's funny and sappy and smart as anything. Here they are performing a song that has nothing to do with Christmas:

And also turned Christian?

And then there's a take, totally randomly, of "Elohai, N'Tzor," the song (well, the line) that closes the Amidah prayer. It's operatic and delicate and overblown, about 90% church music and 10% Old Cantorial Music. But it's scarily well done. And it features Ida Rae Cahana, the former cantor at the Central Synagogue in New York, dueting with -- wait for it -- Ari Shapiro, who is NPR's White House correspondent. It makes you feel uncomfortably like you've stumbled into a church service, and yet at the same time it's exceedingly pleasant to listen to. Like when my parents used to take my sister and me driving around to look at Christmas lights.
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